This content is from: Portfolio David Swensen Is Great for Yale. Is He Horrible for Investing? How the Yale Model ate endowments — and everything else. By Leanna Orr July 31, 2019
This content is from: Opinion The(Easily Misunderstood) Yale Model What pretenders overlook, according to Yale’s former longtime chair. By Charles D. Ellis February 01, 2020
This content is from: Portfolio Book Excerpt: Charles Ellis and the Index Revolution In this exclusive excerpt from his upcoming book, the longtime consultant explains why he’s come to believe that active investing is ultimately a loser’s game. By Charles D. Ellis August 15, 2016
This content is from: Opinion What the Active vs. Passive Debate Is Really About Investors would be well served to think long and hard about market efficiency versus their internal resources when determining to which asset classes they should — or shouldn’t — allocate active risk. By Christopher Schelling October 18, 2017
This content is from: Portfolio New Research Provides Hope for Stock Pickers Under Siege To find benchmark-beating active funds, look for portfolios whose managers are betting alongside outside investors and are willing to work for a reasonable fee. By Julie Segal October 03, 2016
This content is from: Corner Office Asset Managers Yield to Pressure on Fees According to a new survey, asset managers are increasingly discounting fees in the face of pressure from big institutional investors. By Julie Segal May 17, 2013